Rappahannock Record, Thursday, July 28, 2016, Section B
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Managing the Mission You’Re Invited
Historic TIMES Christ Church Brought to you by the Foundation for Historic Christ Church, Inc. & VOLUME 6 I SPRING 2020 I 2019 ANNUAL REPORT CHRISTCHURCH1735.ORG Managing the Mission You’re Invited . 62nd Annual Meeting & by Jill Worth, FHCC President Spring Celebration In January of 1958, a group of area residents met at the parish and for me the most exciting thing: Robert Teagle celebrates 20 Friday, May 15th house of Grace Church in Kilmarnock. The purpose of the meet- years with FHCC in March, and we hope he has 20 more years at 4 p.m. ing was to create an organization to preserve and protect Christ here as he begins a new role as Executive Director. The founders Church. After a series of meetings, The Foundation for Historic would be proud. Join us for the Foundation for Historic Christ Church was established that June. The Mission Statement They would also be proud of our crowded calendar of events. Christ Church’s 62nd Annual Meeting and reads in part: “to preserve and maintain old Christ Church, Alan Taylor, who has twice won the Pulitzer Prize for History, Spring Celebration to honor volunteers and sometimes known as Robert (“King”) Carter’s Church in Lancaster spoke in February. An exceptional list of historians headlines this the opening of the County…to preserve its early dignity and beauty as nearly as may year’s Sunday Speaker Series, the theme of which is “A Variety of 2020 Visitor Season. be feasible; to protect and care for the church, its ancient church- Religious Experiences: Natives, Africans and Europeans in Early You don’t want to miss yard and surrounding properties; to collect, preserve and display Virginia.” In June FHCC will host Thomas Jefferson (Bill Barker) our guest speaker, the records of its use and of the persons active in its history….” and Patrick Henry (Richard Schuman) as they debate the role of acclaimed historian The meeting minutes were typed on a typewriter, with pencil government and taxation in promoting religion in society. -
The Library of Robert Carter of Nomini Hall
W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1970 The Library of Robert Carter of Nomini Hall Katherine Tippett Read College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Read, Katherine Tippett, "The Library of Robert Carter of Nomini Hall" (1970). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539624697. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-syjc-ae62 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE LIBRARY OF ROBERT CARTER OF NOMINI HALL A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of History The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts By Katherine Tippett Read 1970 APPROVAL SHEET This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Author Approved, May 1970 Jane Cdrson, Ph. D Robert Maccubbin, Ph. D. John JEJ Selby, Pm. D. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The writer wishes to express her appreciation to Miss Jane Carson, under whose direction this investigation was conducted, for her patient guidance and criticism throughout the investigation. The author is also indebted to Mr. Robert Maccubbin and Mr. John E. Selby for their careful reading and criticism of the manuscript. -
Comments: Keep Name
1 E-Mail Date In:10/12/2018 Modified:10/16/2018 - 10:00pm Issue:ENGAGE: WL OPPOSE - Oppose WL Name Change Subject:Engage with APS Comments:keep name No postal address available Status:Closed E-Mail 10/16/2018Viewed:Not viewedAssigned:Meg TuccilloSubject:Re: Engage with APSResponse:Customized Engage Default Format 12 pt. v.3(Include history)Salutation:FRIEND - FriendActivity:Msg: 0 Open, 24 Recent Comments: keep name Incoming Subject: Engage with APS o Subject: Engage with APS Please indicate the current topic you'd like to engage with: Naming Process - W-L Please share your comments, feedback or suggestions: The newest controversy that has intrigued a lot of people in Arlington. Being a student of Washington Lee myself, I have ran into many people who asked me my opinions on the topic and what I thought the outcome may be. Every time, I said the same thing, "I don't know". After doing a project in our English class and doing research on Lee and other factors that may impact the decision, I have concluded that Washington Lee should not be renamed. This school has a long history of being one of the best schools in Virginia. Changing the name would wipe away our reputation. It is clear that Lee's viewpoints on some topics, like racism, don't align with modern day values or what Washington Lee’s values are. However, that was a century ago, having slaves was acceptable at the time and the majority of the US had the same views. Especially Virginia being a southern state, made his views more accepted. -
Down but Not Out: How American Slavery Survived the Constitutional Era
Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University History Theses Department of History 12-16-2015 Down But Not Out: How American Slavery Survived the Constitutional Era Jason Butler Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/history_theses Recommended Citation Butler, Jason, "Down But Not Out: How American Slavery Survived the Constitutional Era." Thesis, Georgia State University, 2015. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/history_theses/99 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of History at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. DOWN BUT NOT OUT: HOW AMERICAN SLAVERY SURVIVED THE CONSTITUTIONAL ERA by JASON E. BUTLER Under the Direction of H. Robert Baker, Ph.D. ABSTRACT Whether through legal assault, private manumissions or slave revolt, the institution of slavery weathered sustained and substantial blows throughout the era spanning the American Revolution and Constitutional Era. The tumult of the rebellion against the British, the inspiration of Enlightenment ideals and the evolution of the American economy combined to weaken slavery as the delegates converged on Philadelphia for the Constitutional Convention of 1787. Even in the South, it was not hard to find prominent individuals working, speaking or writing against slavery. During the Convention, however, Northern delegates capitulated to staunch Southern advocates of slavery not because of philosophical misgivings but because of economic considerations. Delegates from North and South looked with anticipation toward the nation’s expansion into the Southwest, confident it would occasion a slavery-based economic boom. -
“Andy” Smith Historic Fairfax City, Inc
"Preserving the Past. Protecting the Future." the Protecting Past. the "Preserving Volume 15, Issue 3 Summer 2018 Andrew B. “Andy” Smith Historic Fairfax City, Inc. A Legacy in a Gesture "Fare Fac - Say Do" by William Page Johnson, II Executive Officers I feel so fortunate for having grown up in Fairfax. The John A.C. Keith President experiences I have had and the people I have encountered in my life Jenée L. Lindner Vice-Pres. Albert L. Leightley Treasurer I would not trade for anything. Andy Smith was one of those people. Linda M. Baringhaus Secretary Andrew Beedel Smith was born May 23, 1911 in a small Hildie Carney Director Patricia A. Fabio Director cabin in Fairfax Station, Virginia.1 He was one of ten children born Linda C. Goldstein Director 2 D. Lee Hubbard Director to Alfred Smith (1870-1916) and Margaret Ella Johnson (1869-1945). Sadly, Fairfax, VA 22030 VA Fairfax, Hon. Wm. Page Johnson, II Director only six of the Smith children, all boys, survived to adulthood. Andy’s father, 10209 Main Street Main 10209 Benny Leonard Director Maria McFarlane Director Alfred Smith, was born in Warrenton, Fauquier County, Virginia in February John A.C. Keith, President Keith, A.C. John Wayne A. Morris Director John P. Murphy Director 1870, the son of Return Address - Historic Fairfax City, Inc. City, Fairfax Historic - Address Return Mary S. Petersen Director Hon. Penny A. Rood Director former Fauquier Mark A. Towery Director County slaves Edward C. Trexler, Jr. Director Matthew T. West Director Jerry and Mary Vacant Director 3 Vacant Director Smith. -
Nomini Hall Case Study Jamie Elizabeth Mesrobian Longwood University
Longwood University Digital Commons @ Longwood University Theses, Dissertations & Honors Papers 2009 An Analysis of Primary Resources Used as Tools for Discovery and Research at Archaeological Sites: Nomini Hall Case Study Jamie Elizabeth Mesrobian Longwood University Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.longwood.edu/etd Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons Recommended Citation Mesrobian, Jamie Elizabeth, "An Analysis of Primary Resources Used as Tools for Discovery and Research at Archaeological Sites: Nomini Hall Case Study" (2009). Theses, Dissertations & Honors Papers. Paper 42. This Honors Paper is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Longwood University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses, Dissertations & Honors Papers by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Longwood University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. An Analysis of Primary Resources Used as Tools for Discovery and Research at Archaeological Sites: Nomini Hall Case Study Jamie Elizabeth Mesrobian Faculty Advisor: Dr. James W. Jordan Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminal Justice Studies Table of Contents: DEDICATION……………………………….1 SINCERE THANKS…………………………2 INTRODUCTION……………………………3 BACKGROUND HISTORY…………………4 ROBERT “COUNCILLOR” CARTER………8 NOMINI HALL TRADES……………….….14 PHILIP VICKERS FITHIAN ……………….16 NOMINI HALL PROPERTY ……………….20 THE SCHOOLHOUSE………………………24 ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH…………26 PROPOSAL OF FURTHER RESEARCH…...32 EXAMPLES OF OTHER SITES……………..36 CONCLUSION……………………………….39 -
Manumission in Nineteenth-Century Virginia
“To Set Devils Free”: Manumission in Nineteenth-Century Virginia Howard Bodenhorn Clemson University and NBER September 2009 Abstract: At what age were slaves manumitted? What factors influenced the age at which slaves were manumitted? Using previously unexploited data set this paper explores the ages and conditions under which slaves were manumitted. OLS estimates reveal that mixed-race slaves, as well as those manumitted by female slave owners and those manumitted in groups or with family members, were manumitted at earlier ages. Proportional hazards estimates suggest that these same groups were manumitted at higher rates. The results also reveal a markedly diminishing risk of manumission after Nat Turner’s rebellion in 1831. Slave owners apparently balanced two competing forces: the use of selective manumission as a reward mechanism to elicit effort and good behavior among slaves, and a social norm increasingly opposed to liberal manumission as fears over the increased size and radicalization of the free black community grew with increases in abolitionist fervor. Acknowledgements: I thank Tomas Cvrcek and seminar participants at Wake Forest for comments on an earlier draft. Pam Bodenhorn provided valuable research assistance. Financial support from the National Science Foundation (SES-0109165), the Earhart Foundation and Lafayette College is gratefully acknowledged. “Slaves are devils, and to make them otherwise than slaves will be to set devils free.” -- Landon Carter1 INTRODUCTION More than two centuries after he wrote “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness,” Thomas Jefferson’s words still strike a deep chord in the American psyche. -
Life in the Garden at Nomini Hall
Magnolia grandiflora The Laurel Tree of Carolina Publication of the Southern Garden Catesby’s NaturalM History, 1743 agnoliaHistory Society Vol. XXXI I No. 1 Winter-Spring 2019 “Long delightsome Prospects…” Life in the Garden at Nomini Hall Mollie Ridout, Annapolis, Maryland the house. To the East a double avenue of poplar trees stretches three-hundred feet to the main road. Fithian Nothing delights a historian more than a primary tells us that these “tall, flourishing, beautiful Poplars,” source, and in the case of Nomini Hall, one of the in rows “something wider than the House … form an great eighteenth-century houses of Virginia, we have an extremely pleasant avenue, & at the Road, through them excellent one in the journal of Philip Vickers Fithian the House appears most romantic, at the same time that it (1747-1776). Situated overlooking Nomini Creek, a does truly elegant.” (Farish, 81) Additional outbuildings, tributary of the Potomac River, Nomini Hall was the including the kitchen, a bake house and a dairy, form “a home of Robert Carter III (1727/28-1804), grandson handsome street” to the West of the house. Although the of Robert “King” Carter. Once the center from which buildings no longer survive, the avenue of Tulip Poplars Colonel Carter managed his far-flung complex of (continued on page 3) plantations and large population of enslaved people, hired workers, and artisans, the house burned to the ground in 1850. The nineteenth-century farmhouse that replaced it is now gone as well. But Colonel Carter’s house and gardens live on in Fithian’s journal, which was edited by Hunter Dickinson Farish (1897-1945) and first published in 1943. -
Guide and Inventories to Manuscripts in the Special
GUIDE AND INVENTORIES TO MANUSCRIPTS IN THE SPECIAL COLLECTIONS SECTION JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR. LIBRARY COLONIAL WILLIAMSBURG FOUNDATION TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. ELIZABETH JACQUELIN AMBLER PAPERS. DMS1954.5 2. HELEN M. ANDERSON PAPERS. MS1989.13 3. JAMES ANDERSON ACCOUNT BOOKS. MS1962.2 4. ROBERT ANDERSON PAPERS. MS1972.2 5. ROBERT ANDERSON PAPERS, ADDITION ONE. MS1978.1 6. L'ARCHITECTURE OU L'ART DE BIEN BASTIR. MS1981.13 7. ARITHMETIC EXERCISE BOOK. MS1965.6 8. EDMUND BAGGE ACCOUNT BOOK. MS1941.9 9. BAYLOR FAMILY PAPERS. MS1959.1 10. BLATHWAYT PAPERS. MS1946.2 11. BOOKPLATE COLLECTION. MS1990.1 12. THOMAS T. BOULDIN PAPERS. MS1987.3 13. BOWYER-HUBARD PAPERS. MS1929.1 14. WILLIAM BROGRAVE ESTATE AUCTION ACCOUNT BOOK. MS1989.7 15. BURWELL PAPERS. MS1964.4 16. NATHANIEL BURWELL LEDGER AND PAPERS. MS1981.12 17. DR. SAMUEL POWELL BYRD PAPERS. MS1939.4 18. WILLIAM BYRD II PAPERS. MS1940.2 19. DR. JAMES CARTER INVOICE BOOK. MS1939.8 20. ROBERT CARTER LETTER BOOKS. MS1957.1 21. ROBERT CARTER III WASTE BOOK. MS1957.2 22. COACH AND CARRIAGE PAPERS. MS1980.2 23. COACH DRAWINGS. MS1948.3 24. ROBERT SPILSBE COLEMAN ARITHMETIC EXERCISE BOOK. MS1973.4 80. ROSE MUSIC BOOKS. MS1973.3 81. SERVANTS' INDENTURES. MS1970.3 82. ANDREW SHEPHERD ACCOUNT BOOK. MS1966.1 83. DAVID SHEPHERD CIPHERING BOOK. MS1971.3 84. THOMAS H. SHERWOOD LETTERS. MS1983.4 85. (COLLECTION RETURNED TO SHIRLEY PLANTATION) 86. SHOE DEALER'S ACCOUNT BOOK. MS1950.5 87. LT. COL. JOHN GRAVES SIMCOE PAPERS. MS1930.6 88. SMITH-DIGGES PAPERS. MS1931.7 89. TURNER SOUTHALL RECEIPT BOOK. MS1931.3 90. WILLIAM SPENCER DIARY. -
A Second Slavery
A Second Slavery Jes´usFern´andez-Villaverde1 June 9, 2021 1University of Pennsylvania Slavery's decline? Slavery and the Revolution • The Revolution puts slavery at the center of the political discussion: 1. Directly: How can you defend simultaneously slavery and the freedom of the colonies? Samuel Johnson (1775) \How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?" 2. Indirectly: By changing power relations. For example, Lord Dunmore's Proclamation (1775) promises freedom for any slaves of patriots who would leave their masters and join the British. • Many former slaves are evacuated by the British when the war ends (as well as the current slaves of loyalists). • Many slave holders freed slaves if they fought in the Revolutionary War. 1 2 3 4 Haiti Revolution (1791-1804) • Hard to overestimate the impact of the Haiti Revolution on the new U.S. • The most successful slave rebellion in history. • Unfortunately, the consequences within Haiti are not as positive as some hoped: Toussaint L'Ouverture and Jean-Pierre Boyer. • Ripple effect in all the continent: 1. Pushes some of the new Latin American Republics to emancipation. 2. Deep impact in the U.S. political economy: fear of a similar rebellion in the south. The U.S. does not recognize Haitian Independence until 1862! 3. Paradoxically, the Haiti Revolution helps the U.S. by convincing Napoleon to liquidate the French empire in the Americas. 5 6 7 8 9 First steps toward abolition • Northern states start abolishing slavery after the Revolution: • Pennsylvania in 1780, New Hampshire and Massachusetts in 1783, Connecticut and Rhode Island in 1784, New York in 1799, and New Jersey in 1804 (Vermont joins as a free state in 1791). -
PLANTATION LIFE at GEORGE WASHINGTON's MOUNT VERNON, 1754 to 1799 by Gwendolyn K. White a Dissertation
COMMERCE AND COMMUNITY: PLANTATION LIFE AT GEORGE WASHINGTON’S MOUNT VERNON, 1754 TO 1799 by Gwendolyn K. White A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of George Mason University in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy History Committee: ___________________________________________ Director ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________ __________________________________________ Department Chairperson ___________________________________________ Program Director ___________________________________________ Dean, College of Humanities and Social Sciences Date: _____________________________________ Spring Semester 2016 George Mason University Fairfax, VA Commerce and Community: Plantation Life at George Washington’s Mount Vernon, 1754 to 1799 A Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at George Mason University by Gwendolyn K. White Master of Architectural History University of Virginia 2003 Bachelor of Individualized Studies George Mason University, 2000 Director: Cynthia A. Kierner, Professor Department of History Spring Semester 2016 George Mason University Fairfax, VA This work is licensed under a creative commons attribution-noderivs 3.0 unported license. ii DEDICATION This dissertation is dedicated in memory of my parents, Walter and Madelyn Berns, and my husband, Egon Verheyen. I wish you were here, but I feel your pride. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -
Manumission in Virginia: the Anti-Slavery Legacy of John Lynch
Manumission in Virginia: The Anti-Slavery Legacy of John Lynch Stephen “Andy” Langeland Culture and Crisis Conference March 6, 2021 Author Biography Stephen “Andy” Langeland has a BA in History and Political Science and is currently finishing a Master's in Public Policy at Liberty. He has worked for over 15 years with small international orphan care organizations in Eastern Europe and East Africa. His study interests have become focused over the past two years on natural rights, free market economics and political economy. Introduction This paper is in no way an apology for the institution of slavery in any form. In fact, it is a reiteration of Biblical doctrine and natural rights philosophy that posit all humans are created equal. The institution of slavery knew few bounds throughout recorded history and was as ubiquitous and durable as the activities of marriage or warfare, practiced by every culture and religion (Drescher 2009, 7-8, 12-39). Negro slavery specifically was an institution in all colonies of the New World at some point in history (Davis 1969, vii). The morality of slavery was an unquestioned fact of life throughout the history of mankind until the 18th century (Sowell 2011, 18). In 1788, John Jay described this sentiment in a letter, noting that before the Revolution few had questioned the institution of slavery (Dorsey 1851, 56). Biblical text is devoid of specific prohibition against slavery, a fact sadly used as justification for its continuation (Blake 1857, 408). The Quakers, however, were one of the few religious groups who invoked Scriptural admonitions to publicly question the status-quo of the seemingly unshakeable “peculiar institution” in the thirteen colonies (Helg 2019, 1, 39).